1,25-Dihydroxy vitamin D 3 inhibits LPS-mediated inflammatory responses in endometriosis

article OA: gold CC0 ⤵ 2 in-corpus citations
AI-generated summary by claude@2026-06, 2026-06-07

1,25-dihydroxy vitamin D3 inhibited endometriosis lesion growth and suppressed LPS-mediated inflammatory responses by stabilizing IκBα and activating the VDR.

One-sentence paraphrase of the abstract; not a substitute for reading it. No clinical advice. How this works

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Endometriosis, a chronic immune-mediated inflammatory disease, remains elusive in its pathogenesis. Given vitamin D (VD)'s pivotal role in modulating innate and adaptive immune responses, we sought to elucidate how VD modulates inflammatory responses in endometriosis. MATERIALS AND METHODS: -26,23-lactone). RESULTS: significantly inhibited lesion growth, suppressed NF-κB pathway activation, and corresponding inflammatory phenotypes in a rat model of endometriosis. CONCLUSIONS: VDR-dependent endometrial homeostasis regulation, suppressing LPS-mediated inflammatory responses and NF-κB signaling pathway through VDR activation and IκBα stabilization.

My notes (saved in your browser only)

Condition tags

mesh:D004715endometriosis

MeSH descriptors

Calcitriol Calcitriol Calcitriol Calcitriol Calcitriol Calcitriol Calcitriol Calcitriol Calcitriol Calcitriol Calcitriol Calcitriol Calcitriol Calcitriol Calcitriol Calcitriol Calcitriol Calcitriol Calcitriol Calcitriol

Citation neighborhood (2-hop)

Papers in the corpus that this work cites (lower rings, blue) and that cite this one (upper rings, green). Dot size scales with the paper's in-corpus citation count — bigger dot = more influential within the endo/adeno field. Click a dot to open that paper. Outer rings show 2-hop neighbours — papers reached through the immediate citers/citees. [ collapse to 1-hop ]

References (44)

Cited by (2)

Source provenance

europepmc
last seen: 2026-06-04T01:30:01.192114+00:00
openalex
last seen: 2026-06-04T00:00:01.174412+00:00
pmc
last seen: 2026-05-13T20:22:03.195721+00:00
pubmed
last seen: 2026-06-02T00:31:24.865732+00:00
License: CC0 · commercial use OK